Unmet Need
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is a growing healthcare crisis1
Every 65 seconds, someone in the United States develops AD, the fifth-leading cause of death in the United States among individuals aged 65 and older.2,3
Today, 6.5 million Americans over 65 are living with AD. By 2060, this number is projected to more than double to ~14 million.3
Significant gaps remain in the early detection and diagnosis of AD, especially earlier in the disease when symptoms are subtle and are difficult to distinguish from normal aging1
EVALUATED TOO LATE
AD diagnosis is delayed on average by 2-3 years after symptoms onset, and is often made only in the latter stages of the disease.4,5
UNDERDIAGNOSED
Over 50% of patients with dementia have never been formally diagnosed—but 89% (N=639) of people surveyed from the US said that they would want to know if AD is the cause of their cognitive impairment.6-8
MISDIAGNOSED
Nearly 1 in 3 people clinically diagnosed with AD had no evidence of amyloid plaques,* a neuropathological hallmark of AD.9-11
“At first, I just thought it was part of growing older, but it kept getting worse.”
AD hides behind time
LEARN HOWHealth disparities for certain populations are well established in AD3: